Month: March 2017

There are always 2 sides to any argument, and the one over whether schools are better or worse than individual tutoring is an old one. Ever since some countries allowed parents to pull their children out of formal educational institutes and have them tutored at home (as long as they were receiving an education), debates have been raging about the benefits of individual teacher-student attention vs. community culture. No matter which side of the debate you fall on however, no one can deny that schools play their part in imparting some important values to our children.

Discipline and Self-Control

Educational institutes are synonymous with ‘discipline’ because that is the first place that young children encounter rules and regulations for the first time in their impressionable young lives. As they grow older however, children realize that – whether they go to a DSS school, private or state school – the “rules” of a school is more about training to children to control themselves and cultivate self-discipline. Without it, society would be plunged into chaos. The strict structure of the educational system actually helps humans to negotiate some order in their lives. Start looking for more details regarding DSS school here.

Monetary Value

Surprisingly enough, most of us did our first monetary transactions in the school cafeteria, where we would buy lunch and figure out how much we should receive in balance, or how much we could buy with X amount of money and how much we could get back in balance. Others figure out the values of things by taking their term fees with them and paying it. Children who attend the DSS secondary school will know how much money they are saving for their parents compared to parents who have to pay the full amount for their children. This awareness doesn’t happen if you are home schooled alone with no reference of how much your education costs.

Team-Player

The world is once again leaning towards team dynamics, but with more individuality than before. Just like the children with siblings learn to share more easily than the single child, children who were home schooled face additional pressure when they become adults and are placed in positions where they have to work as a team. By going to a public educational institute daily, we develop certain social skills necessary to navigate the minefield that are human interactions. We learn courtesy, manners, persuasion, negotiation etc. that helps us later in life.

These are only a few of the many skills that we learn in an educational institute. They help us become responsible, dependable, disciplined and empathetic adults who are fully functional in an integrated social network.